Issue
Sometimes I need to run a command or script on my device, but they are not available or don't exist.
Can we add some additional commands to Android
device's shell
,
except those commands that are already available on it?
For example, add screenrecord
command to my device (my device has Android
API lower than 19), which this is unavailable on it.
I know how to get the list of available commands on the device with adb shell
adb shell ls /system/bin
but I want to add more custom commands and scripts, to do some special and work.
Is there any way to do it? Or it's impossible?
Solution
The answer provides a sequence of steps for building an executable for Android shell
through both Eclipse
(outdated) and Android Studio
(4.1+ by the time of this writing). The last includes ndk-build
and CMake
.
I. PREPARE SOURCE CODE
As an example consider mycommand.c
:
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
printf("My Command!\n");
return 0;
}
II. BUILD EXECUTABLE
Eclipse (might be outdated)
In assumption that NDK
location is set in Eclipse
, create a new Android Application Project
and do the following steps.
Add native support. Right click on the project in
Project Explorer
>Android Tools
>Add Native Support
>Finish
Add source code, i.e. put
mycommand.c
underproject_root
/jni
folder.Edit
Android.mk
underproject_root
/jni
as follows:LOCAL_PATH := $(call my-dir) include $(CLEAR_VARS) LOCAL_MODULE := mycommand LOCAL_SRC_FILES := mycommand.c include $(BUILD_EXECUTABLE)
Create
Application.mk
* under theproject_root
/jni
folder:APP_ABI := all
Build executable and find it under
project_root/libs/<abi>/mycommand
.
*Binaries for all
supported CPU architectures are generated here. Use adb shell cat /proc/cpuinfo
to find out the CPU architecture and set APP_ABI
as per Supported ABIs.
Android Studio and ndk-build
The steps are as follows.
Add
mycommand.c
,Android.mk
(same as in theEclipse
section above) to the/app/src/main/cpp
folder.Edit
build.gradle
:android { ... defaultConfig { ... externalNativeBuild { ndkBuild { targets "mycommand" // use a specific ABI filter if needed // abiFilters "armeabi-v7a" } } } externalNativeBuild { ndkBuild { path "src/main/cpp/Android.mk" } } }
Build project and find the executable under
/app/.externalNativeBuild/ndkBuild/debug/obj/local/<abi>/mycommand
Android Studio and CMake
Create a project using the Native C++ template.
Add
mycommand.c
to the/app/src/main/cpp
folder and editCMakeLists.txt
:cmake_minimum_required(VERSION x.x.x) add_executable(mycommand mycommand.c )
Edit
build.gradle
:android { ... defaultConfig { ... externalNativeBuild { cmake { targets "mycommand" // use a specific ABI filter if needed // abiFilters "armeabi-v7a" } } } ... externalNativeBuild { cmake { path "src/main/cpp/CMakeLists.txt" } } }
Build project and find the executable under
/app/build/intermediates/cmake/debug/obj/<abi>/mycommand
III. PUSH BINARY INTO DEVICE
Push mycommand
binary from where it is located into your device. Keep in mind that files on SD card aren't executable by default, so the binary should be pushed into the device's internal storage. Depending of whether device is rooted or not you have the following options:
On non-rooted device you can push the binary to
/data/local/tmp
:adb push mycommand /data/local/tmp
On rooted device you can push the binary to SD card and then copy it to
/system/bin
(after remounting the partition in read-write mode) along with the other executable files:adb push mycommand /path/to/sdcard adb shell su mount -o rw,remount /system cp /path/to/sdcard/mycommand /system/bin
IV. SET EXECUTABLE PERMISSION (optional)
Set the permission of the binary to be executable (this might not be needed in case of /data/local/tmp
). Below chmod 555
(r-xr-xr-x) is used:
adb shell chmod 555 /path/to/mycommand
V. RUN COMMAND
Now you can shell into your device (with adb shell
) and execute the command.
On non-rooted device use the absolute path to the command:
$ /data/local/tmp/mycommand My Command!
On rooted device, in case the binary has been copied to
/system/bin
, you can call it by the file name:$ mycommand My Command!
Answered By - Onik
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